The Three Horrifying Stages of Syphilis

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  • Опубликовано: 2 янв 2023
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    Sources:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syphili...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epidemi...
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Комментарии • 3,4 тыс.

  • @barryrichards2320
    @barryrichards2320 Год назад +2849

    I subscribed as soon as I read Dark Science.

  • @Flammenengel1
    @Flammenengel1 Год назад +13340

    Another interesting factoid about Syphilis: back in the days before Penicillin they used to infect people suffering from late stage Neurosyphilis with Malaria as a cure. The intense fever cycles and highly stimulated immune system would kill off the bacteria and the Malaria could then be taken care of afterwards. While they used relatively mild Malaria strains the method obviously still came with risks, but was better than nothing. If I recall correctly the guys who did it first even got a Nobel prize for it.

    • @benl9776
      @benl9776 Год назад +475

      That´s a very interesting fact, do you have a link to the source?

    • @bread1830
      @bread1830 Год назад +439

      The source is: I made it the fuck it

    • @Flammenengel1
      @Flammenengel1 Год назад +2336

      @@benl9776 Posting links doesn't seem to work but you may google them yourself.
      A historical source: Redvers N. Ironside, Jan 1925, "ON THE TREATMENT OF GENERAL PARALYSIS BY MALARIA INOCULATION", Br J Vener Dis.; 1(1): 58-63. doi: 10.1136/sti.1.1.58
      A more recent one: Daey Ouwens, Ingrid M et al. “Malaria Fever Therapy for General Paralysis of the Insane: A Historical Cohort Study.” European neurology vol. 78,1-2 (2017): 56-62. doi:10.1159/000477900
      If you prefer them, there are also articles on Wikipedia.
      For full clarification: originally I learned about it through my microbiology prof, who mentioned it as a fun fact while we were mainly covering other diseases. For that I don't have an easily accessible source of course, other than my memory and the notes I took.

    • @kami2848
      @kami2848 Год назад +1653

      @@Flammenengel1 what a legend. thank you
      L for the guy above you lol

    • @skarloeythomas5172
      @skarloeythomas5172 Год назад +63

      @@benl9776 He said factoid, meaning it’s false.

  • @gerardosalazar161
    @gerardosalazar161 Год назад +5574

    The lady at 00:35 is not a victim of syphilis but a lady who died in a fire and her picture was taken as a Memento Mori by her family; I believe that her memory deserves respect even if we don’t know her name. May she Rest in Peace.

    • @chimom7112
      @chimom7112 Год назад +399

      Not that i check out all the syphilis post, but i have seen her in one before. Nice to know the truth and im sure this lady would have appreciated it also.

    • @DarkStarHearts
      @DarkStarHearts Год назад +183

      Wow, thanks for posting this comment and sharing the info

    • @Nuts2Big
      @Nuts2Big Год назад +220

      That’s so nice of you to pay her respects I didn’t know but may she Rest In Peace as you said.

    • @karyannfontaine8757
      @karyannfontaine8757 Год назад +83

      Thank you for that information. Yes, RIP dear lady.

    • @gordonross3270
      @gordonross3270 Год назад +36

      Source?

  • @bernardhughes8598
    @bernardhughes8598 8 месяцев назад +788

    Over 40 years ago, I woke with a total body rash. The hospital suggested secondary syphilis and sent me to the nearby special clinic. They immediately spotted that it wasn't. It was decided that it was a severe allergy to the penecillin that I had been prescribed for a very sore throat. Good job the first hospital didn't pump me full of penecillin to cure the syphilis I didn't have.

    • @u4riahsc
      @u4riahsc 6 месяцев назад +18

      Around 1968 when I was in high school I contacted mono and had penecillian shots that caused a rash all over my body, even in my mouth.

    • @dinacharlayne1912
      @dinacharlayne1912 4 месяца назад +4

      They have to test positive for it they say before they give medicine but we saw some youtube videos in like san francisco saying give them the medicine... but san francisco's a world away from oklahoma probably.

    • @KatieDeGo
      @KatieDeGo 4 месяца назад +3

      I had hand foot and mouth as an adult but thought I had Syphilis due to my hand and foot rash lol

    • @GayHaruspex
      @GayHaruspex 2 месяца назад +3

      Omg, someone else with a penicillin allergy! You’re the only other person I’ve met with one, lol

    • @bernardhughes8598
      @bernardhughes8598 2 месяца назад +1

      @@GayHaruspex One of my 3 daughters is also allergic. She is the only other person I know.

  • @LungsMcGee
    @LungsMcGee 6 месяцев назад +811

    I was in an STD clinic once. There was a motivational poster on the wall that said "If life gives you lemons, make lemonade". I said to the bloke next to me, "What are we supposed to do, make crab cakes?"

    • @EviLReN3
      @EviLReN3 6 месяцев назад +13

      Haha good one :D

    • @michellek2083
      @michellek2083 5 месяцев назад +6

      😂

    • @roseamberzine5846
      @roseamberzine5846 4 месяца назад +5

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @gobigorange
      @gobigorange 4 месяца назад +8

      My first wife’s cousin give me the crabs 3 times. I kept going back til I run out of shampoo 😂

    • @LungsMcGee
      @LungsMcGee 4 месяца назад +5

      @@gobigorange Third time is the charm🦀🦀

  • @philc.9280
    @philc.9280 Год назад +2521

    I remember back when I was in my residency we had an elderly gentleman suffering from cognition issues. Just about everyone wrote him off as having early-stage dementia or Alzheimers. My preceptor astutely ordered an STD screen just as a long shot. The guy was positive for syphilis. He was in his 70's so he probably had the tertiary stage for 30 years. One of many facts ingrained in my head all these years.

    • @amyyoung2804
      @amyyoung2804 Год назад +125

      I've also seen a couple cases of primary syphilis as a nurse working at the VA hospital. Big injection of Bicillin did the trick.

    • @cintarocko5095
      @cintarocko5095 Год назад +13

      Yuck

    • @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823
      @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 Год назад

      I heard of a mam who came up w herpes after not touching a woman for like 30 YEARS.

    • @drbigmdftnu
      @drbigmdftnu Год назад +117

      I had a similar case in my residency. Couple in their 80's, wife was showing dementia signs. Did the workup and she was positive for syphilis.
      How are we going to tell these nice old folks who had been married 60 years?
      When we told them, they were quiet for a few moments. Then the husband mumbled "oh... that old thing"
      She apparently had been partially treated in the past but never cured or completed. CSF showed likely neurosyphilis. Thankfully, it is still a sensitive organism and infection pretty easily eradicated. The problem is the immune system gets so wigged out - the systemic inflammation and vasculitis may persist. Just like Lyme, also caused by a spirochete. It becomes an autoimmune disease.

    • @donnawoods7204
      @donnawoods7204 Год назад +54

      Had several tertiary syphilis patients in the nursing home, in their 80-90s. The dementia was much worse than other types

  • @Haydenerich
    @Haydenerich 4 месяца назад +1281

    I had syphilis years ago. I don’t remember having any distinct symptoms, so it went undetected for a couple years.
    I started having health problems after those years. My joints and body constantly ached. I had lesions all over my legs, and a gumma (tumor) in my right eye.
    After going to countless drs with no explanation of my symptoms, my dermatologist took a biopsy of a sore on my leg. Not sure how she figured it out, but she ran a test for syphilis and was positive.
    When I went to the hospital, they did a spinal tap and confirmed that I had neuro-syphilis in my spinal fluid. The dr told me i couldve had organ failure in a matter of weeks.
    I had to have a PICC line (which is an IV that thread through the arm veins to above the heart) which was connected to antibiotics that would continuously provide medication. I had to wear that for nearly a month.
    Aside from losing my vision in my right eye, thankfully I made a full recover without any other serious damage.

    • @spiritmatter1553
      @spiritmatter1553 3 месяца назад +100

      That’s spelled PICC line. (Medical transcriptionist here.) So glad you got a diagnosis in time.

    • @williebgoodtoot
      @williebgoodtoot 3 месяца назад +13

      Damn

    • @Ami-jc2oo
      @Ami-jc2oo 3 месяца назад +28

      Do you have a sick eye patch then?
      Also glad to see you mostly recovered.

    • @JohnSmith-fq7hj
      @JohnSmith-fq7hj 3 месяца назад +16

      ​@@Ami-jc2oolol I used to want to lose an eye just so I could wear a cool glass eye (like bill the butcher in gangs of new York) or eye patch lol.

    • @grahh7234
      @grahh7234 3 месяца назад +1

      That’s mega cap bro u would’ve been cooked. If u actually got it

  • @OpEditorial
    @OpEditorial Год назад +1446

    Fun fact: the grotesque rotting features and unpredictable sometimes violent behaviour of late stage syphilis sufferers have directly inspired the zombie genre of film and fiction.

    • @albusnightspring8057
      @albusnightspring8057 11 месяцев назад +52

      Zombies come from VooDoo legend though as far as I know

    • @ecvjtv2778
      @ecvjtv2778 11 месяцев назад +125

      Rabies could also be a possible inspiration

    • @stillhere4165
      @stillhere4165 11 месяцев назад +98

      ​​he wasn't saying syphilis was the progenitor of zombies, just that it inspired elements of them. Both takes are true.

    • @BethBurns68
      @BethBurns68 11 месяцев назад +19

      @@ecvjtv2778 , but does rabies cause rotting flesh? The images in this video certainly made me think of zombies, poor, poor people.

    • @ecvjtv2778
      @ecvjtv2778 11 месяцев назад +34

      @Elizabeth Burns Not that I know of, but it causes foaming around the mouth due to difficulty with swallowing. And more importantly, it causes anger and insanity. It also mainly gets spread through bites. These are the factors that could be possible inspirations to zombies

  • @Amy_the_Lizard
    @Amy_the_Lizard 10 месяцев назад +232

    Would like to point out that with the current rise in antibiotic-resistant syphilis strains, I wouldn't consider it "nothing to worry about," just less of a worry than it was in the past

    • @phils4634
      @phils4634 9 месяцев назад +21

      Fortunately still very sensitive to benzathine penicillin (1.8g single dose, usually as 2 x 900mg injections, one for each bum cheek!) If penicillin resistance does become really established, we're up the creek, especially seeing as Neisseria gonorrhoeae is now turning up with "significant" Ceftriaxone resistance (and cases are also on the rise for this one too!)

    • @Amy_the_Lizard
      @Amy_the_Lizard 9 месяцев назад +12

      @phils4634 Absolutely! We had a two whole days of class focused on antibiotic resistant gonorrhea in my evolution of infectious diseases class, it's scary stuff - especially that one strain there's only been a couple cases of that was only susceptible to one medication

    • @phils4634
      @phils4634 9 месяцев назад

      @@Amy_the_Lizard Whilst Syphilis and Gonorrhoea get all the limelight, Mycoplasma genitalium's the one to keep an eye on. Doxycycline resistance is now commonplace (especially for strains arising from SE Asia), and with the loss of Pristinamycin, we've only got Minocycline (far less effective) or Sitafloxacin (which is difficult to source, and pretty costly). I'm Australian, and you might not be surprised how many older Gents nip "over there" to find "Mrs Right", and come back home with "unexpected passengers" 🙂

    • @2bfrank657
      @2bfrank657 3 месяца назад +15

      Absolutely!! I cringed when he said that. Such a complacent attitude. Antibiotic resistance is a huge problem for mankind.

    • @KadenHartley
      @KadenHartley Месяц назад +2

      Sorry i keep using evolve points on my bacteria in Plague inc.

  • @daintybeigli
    @daintybeigli Год назад +1810

    I work in a rehab profession and had a client with neurosyphilis. By the time he was diagnosed and treated with antibiotics, he had significant brain damage. He appeared to have been infected from his mother in utero, but no one knew as he had been put up for adoption. He was only born in like 1975. I’ll never forget him.

    • @renato7184
      @renato7184 Год назад +99

      Poor guy

    • @annmurphy8440
      @annmurphy8440 Год назад +1

      I hope life has been kind to him to be born with such a terrible affliction through no fault of his own life is hard enough for some people some people believe that we choose the life we want to live before we are born what a crock of shit Ann Murphy Ireland

    • @beandon9074
      @beandon9074 Год назад +34

      My god

    • @mycolliesandme268
      @mycolliesandme268 Год назад +95

      @@markmower1746 you don't have to be gay to get it. It's transmitted with both sexes

    • @mycolliesandme268
      @mycolliesandme268 Год назад +70

      @@markmower1746 they said he was infected by his mother. But you say he was gay.

  • @andrebartels1690
    @andrebartels1690 Год назад +693

    My uncle died from syphilis. We never got to know why he didn't get a therapy. We found out he had syphilis when it was too late to rescue him. It was a nasty death. May he rest in peace.

    • @Coco-xw3wp
      @Coco-xw3wp Год назад

      One of many Disgusting diseases European or Caucasians has and wipped out race's of people with their Disgusting hygiene add filth!! I believe it's karma for all the evil deeds these demonic entities brought to the human race period! Not only that 98% if them suffered from the black Plague!

    • @Parker05
      @Parker05 11 месяцев назад +8

      were any other family members infected?

    • @andrebartels1690
      @andrebartels1690 11 месяцев назад +45

      No, there were not. That's probably because syphilis is not contagious as a flu. You need to have sex or do something that's as intense as sex.

    • @jacquelinewilliamson8933
      @jacquelinewilliamson8933 11 месяцев назад +32

      Maybe he was to embarrassed to do so sadly this still happens.

    • @tamekabatson1998
      @tamekabatson1998 11 месяцев назад +14

      Sorry for your loss 😢

  • @castielsgranny4308
    @castielsgranny4308 11 месяцев назад +259

    My best friend somehow got a dose of it & didn’t realize what it was until he developed full-blown tertiary syphilis. That was in the 90’s. He’s been severely disabled ever since.

    • @user-rw3cv3kw7v
      @user-rw3cv3kw7v 11 месяцев назад +13

      Castiels Granny
      Somehow got a dose of it?
      It's pretty clear how he must have got it.
      Sad for him though.

    • @zagsz8631
      @zagsz8631 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@user-rw3cv3kw7vlmao

    • @LittleKitty22
      @LittleKitty22 4 месяца назад

      @@user-rw3cv3kw7v Why sad? If he can't be decent and stay with one woman, he deserves to pay the price.

    • @Mikelaxo
      @Mikelaxo 4 месяца назад +47

      ​@@LittleKitty22 Getting an STD doesn't necessarily mean you're promiscuous

    • @McYeroc
      @McYeroc 4 месяца назад +31

      ​​​@@LittleKitty22people have contracted syphilis in utero before they were even born and only found out when they get into the 3rd stage of syphilis when in there 20s or 30s. Get a grip.

  • @daverose8082
    @daverose8082 11 месяцев назад +149

    Having nursed patients with limbs rotting away from the inside due to the latter stages of GPI (General Paralysis of the Insane) I can attest to the devastating effects of Syphilis.

    • @boobalooqwe4687
      @boobalooqwe4687 6 месяцев назад +9

      that would be an awesome punk rock band name

  • @chrisb9365
    @chrisb9365 Год назад +1006

    Worth mentioning is congenital syphilis, e.g. syphilis you are born with due to mother being infected. CDC actually says that there is rise of syphilis in the recent years.

    • @melitopiia4730
      @melitopiia4730 Год назад +77

      @captain awesome Source?

    • @Niosesore
      @Niosesore Год назад +159

      @@captainawesome12345 actually, it's raising among men (mostly homosexual men) and decreasing among women lol

    • @z1u512
      @z1u512 Год назад +24

      @@Niosesore Source?

    • @Niosesore
      @Niosesore Год назад +144

      @@z1u512 C. L. Cellum Sexually transmitted infections and HIV: epidemiology and interventions,
      M. E. Kent and F. Romanelli Reexamining Syphilis: An Update on Epidemiology, Clinical Manifestations, and Management

    • @Niosesore
      @Niosesore Год назад +37

      @@z1u512 It's mostly US/EU centric, it's different in African and Asian countries.

  • @TokyoAzzA
    @TokyoAzzA Год назад +1746

    I feel great sympathy towards the people who suffered horribly from this disease in our history, and great appreciation to the medical scientists who developed the treatment preventing most people in the future from suffering the same fate.

    • @SrMikicas
      @SrMikicas Год назад +39

      Don't you worry. In the future there will be new diseases to deal with, either from new environments we visit, new problems we create or worse man made diseases designed to destroy or incapacitate a population. Hopefully we grow beyond this but I think we will have them as long as humans are humans.

    • @seanriopel3132
      @seanriopel3132 Год назад +15

      Plenty of people still suffer from it in poor communities around the globe.

    • @FreeSpirit47
      @FreeSpirit47 Год назад +10

      That's a compassionate stance.
      The world of 2023 has its own problems. Obesity is one of the worst.

    • @wansworld27
      @wansworld27 Год назад +38

      I think its a reminder to keep your pants on, rather than freely sharing the love around if you know what I mean.

    • @FreeSpirit47
      @FreeSpirit47 Год назад +24

      @@wansworld27 I doubt that love had much to do with it. Lust, yes. Love, no.

  • @thatchick721
    @thatchick721 8 месяцев назад +200

    This reminded me of the Tuskegee experiment :(
    An institution in 1932 did a study on syphilis. They got a big group of black men I think like 600 and told them they were treating them for “bad blood” but they were actually injecting them with syphilis. They weren’t informed of the experiment but they were told that in exchange for participating in the study they would receive free meals, free medical exams, and burial insurance. Even after they developed a treatment for it, the men who were infected In the studies were not offered any kind of treatment. The people conducting the studies wanted to track the full progression of the disease and so they would study the men until they died and then preform autopsies to gather more information. It’s horrible and unethical.

    • @linenflaxen6467
      @linenflaxen6467 8 месяцев назад +8

      What happened to the institution? Isn't that illegal?

    • @theduder2617
      @theduder2617 8 месяцев назад

      @@linenflaxen6467
      Today, yes that would be extremely illegal. Well, more likely to result in criminal prosecution. But in 1932, although "freed", African Americans were still treated as fodder. They had little to no rights, and were often used in unethical experiments, if not outright chased down and murdered.
      Sadly, the aforementioned "syphilis study" continued until 1972 when word of the horrendous "study" became public. The "institution"... now considered a national historic landmark for other supposed reasons.

    • @kimbella1452
      @kimbella1452 7 месяцев назад

      So true! It's horrible how they used these black men to experiment on!!!🤬

    • @rogervincent8314
      @rogervincent8314 7 месяцев назад

      @@linenflaxen6467 look up Tuskegee experiment

    • @celestebell9992
      @celestebell9992 7 месяцев назад +5

      Yes the true story is told in the movie Miss Evers Boys..

  • @ds_the_rn
    @ds_the_rn 11 месяцев назад +322

    I’m an adolescent psych RN. One of my 15 yr old patients has all the STDs, including syphilis. She was trafficked for sex. And here I thought the sore on her mouth was because she got popped by her pimp. I don’t think syphilis is making her mentally ill. Hopefully we caught it in time.

    • @kugelschreiberzusammenbaue3585
      @kugelschreiberzusammenbaue3585 10 месяцев назад +12

      what do you mean by 'all the STDs' How many are there ?

    • @MonsterShiet
      @MonsterShiet 10 месяцев назад +40

      THANK YOU taking care of those kids

    • @thecrow5006
      @thecrow5006 10 месяцев назад +34

      HIV, Syphilis, Gonnoreah or however it is spelled, chlamydia just from the top of my head

    • @abjectmadness1111
      @abjectmadness1111 9 месяцев назад +90

      That is heartbreaking, but also makes me so mad. I genuinely cannot explain how horrible that makes me feel. That poor girl.

    • @richardlyman2961
      @richardlyman2961 8 месяцев назад

      @@abjectmadness1111Poor clients too they also got the stds from her

  • @jordanlucien426
    @jordanlucien426 Год назад +1360

    Hey imma be real with anyone who sees this, I caught syphilis literally a week before I left for navy bootcamp and thankfully they caught it in such a early state the penicillin shot in the ass hurts and the anxiety of me accidentally passing it on to another person killed me for weeks so please wear protection (thankfully to my knowledge I didn't spread it to anyone and the person I caught it from never informed me at any point in time so definitely watch where you're sticking your stuff at)

    • @AR15andGOD
      @AR15andGOD Год назад +315

      You could just exercise self control and not have sex with people you don't care about at all.

    • @valeriopippo3370
      @valeriopippo3370 Год назад +309

      @@AR15andGOD Username checks out

    • @terminatorofsimps8255
      @terminatorofsimps8255 Год назад +299

      @@valeriopippo3370 What he is saying is correct. If people kept theyr pants on; instead of doing it with the first person they see on the street; deseases like syphilis would be extinct.

    • @iidentifyasaa-10warthogbrr10
      @iidentifyasaa-10warthogbrr10 Год назад +160

      @@valeriopippo3370 I see nothing wrong in what he said.

    • @marktwain2053
      @marktwain2053 Год назад

      @@terminatorofsimps8255
      If guys would keep their dicks out of other guys assses, there would be no AIDS, but that doesn't keep them from pushing the lifestyle, now does it?

  • @CH3CH2OCH2CH3net
    @CH3CH2OCH2CH3net 11 месяцев назад +114

    One of my favorite composers, Franz Schubert, died from syphilis at age 31. Somehow, he managed to compose 1,000 pieces of music. He wrote one of the greatest piano sonatas of all time the month he died from the disease (the B-Flat Major Piano Sonata, D. 960).

    • @whome1299
      @whome1299 10 месяцев назад +1

      That is my favorite. 🤘

    • @Filthypagan
      @Filthypagan 9 месяцев назад +4

      Wrong he died of typhus

    • @electronicpizzaparlor
      @electronicpizzaparlor 8 месяцев назад

      @@Filthypagan Was never much of a fan of his....

    • @coffeemetro
      @coffeemetro 7 месяцев назад

      I love Schubert!

  • @ExtaTer
    @ExtaTer Год назад +75

    The sad thing is that there are no reliable tests for neurosyphilis in 3rd stage, especially one that was incompletely treated before. The RPR, VDRL tests are negative due to treatment, both in blood and in CSF. The treponema-specific tests are all positive for life and don't tell you anything new after you had syphilis. The only way to detect a remaining syphilis in CNS is to compare the antibodies in CSF and the blood - if they are more in CSF, then you have "intrathecal" production of antibodies in CNS and neurosyphilis. Most doctors in US don't know about this test, will not do it. There were patients with strokes in which all current tests show negative for neurosyphilis, yet they had it because their CSF was able to infect rabbits. Extremely sneaky and nasty disease, similar to Lyme. People still die from it because doctors underestimate it and have no tests for the more advanced stages.

    • @SQUAREHEADSAM1912
      @SQUAREHEADSAM1912 11 месяцев назад +7

      Third stage syphilis is still fatal, as it usually causes sclerosis or dementia, or sometimes both.

    • @zayd7282
      @zayd7282 9 месяцев назад +1

      Is possible for someone to have primary stage symptoms (chancles) but never secondary stage (rashes) and the only treatment they got was physical removal of several chancles by a dermatologist?? Could the desease skip stage 2 and progress to advanced stages ?

    • @SQUAREHEADSAM1912
      @SQUAREHEADSAM1912 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@zayd7282 it’s not, just the three stages plus the 30 year dormant stage, death is usually not the syphilis itself but the complications it increases the chance of. Usually it’s either heart problems, bone rotting away, sclerosis and or dementia (dementia is most common.) , and multiple other can be brought on by syphilis too, but it’s mainly those.
      Some infected though can live totally healthy long lives without ever dying from it, the only down side in that case is being a carrier.

    • @zayd7282
      @zayd7282 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@SQUAREHEADSAM1912 thx for answering. So the desease can skip stage 2 completly and advance to latent and tertiary? The person possibly contracted the virus and had the stage 1 symptoms (the sores on the genitals which were all scraped off by his dermatologist but never experienced any symptoms after that (no stage 2 rashes or any other obvious symptoms for 20 years so far)...and if the deasease can skip stages what should the person do to avoid any possible tietary stage damage? I appreciate if you can get me again on this question.

    • @SQUAREHEADSAM1912
      @SQUAREHEADSAM1912 9 месяцев назад

      @@zayd7282 well it’s not possible to skip any stages. But before there was a cure, the survivors of the disease all survived because the dormant stage never ended, usually if the dormant stage lasts longer then 30 years you’ll not likely to die from the third stage. Once thethird stage causes dementia or sclerosis it’s pretty much a death sentence, as too much harm has been done to the body. Back then the way to avoid getting it was to play it safe and use a condom.

  • @kylieknight2365
    @kylieknight2365 Год назад +297

    Al Capone also infected his wife who passed it onto his son (sonny) in utero and his son was born deaf and what appears now to of also been some sort of brain damage. But Mae for some reason didn’t seem to be affected by the disease and passed away at 89 in a nursing home and sonny passed in 2004

    • @stefanrothe8622
      @stefanrothe8622 Год назад +7

      Of?

    • @nobbynoris
      @nobbynoris Год назад +40

      I heard that story. Capone didn't seek medical treatment because he was worried his wife would find the doctors' bills and realise he had been playing away from home . . . Mrs Capone must have been one frightening woman, that's all I'm gonna say.

    • @user-gy6hr4ti6b
      @user-gy6hr4ti6b 8 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@nobbynorisEither that, or more likely, she had significant, far-reaching dirt on him. The kind of stuff that would make his run-in with the IRS look like small peas. Better to keep her happy and complicit, than to risk losing everything because you couldn't keep it in your pants.

    • @chervilisbetterthancilantro
      @chervilisbetterthancilantro 6 месяцев назад +8

      And maIes blame women for in utero contraction. All the stories prove maIes to be the cause.

    • @NotMykl
      @NotMykl 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@nobbynoris What I heard was he was afraid of needles, nothing was ever said of him being "afraid his wife would find out."

  • @indaboyd7791
    @indaboyd7791 Год назад +331

    I was a caretaker for a lady who had tertiary syphylis infected by her husband who received it in the korean war. She died early unfortunately and there was nothing they could do abt it except palliation for her discomforts.

    • @lauracarnes4007
      @lauracarnes4007 5 месяцев назад

      God bless her and all the good and faithful women who have been infected by cheating scumbags. Her husband didn't get syphilis by eating some bad Kimchi. He was banging prostitutes.

    • @stephaniehowell1109
      @stephaniehowell1109 5 месяцев назад +22

      She trusted her husband not to cheat, and bring home something that would harm her. So many wives do. Smh.
      May she rest in Peace.

    • @megrocks3026
      @megrocks3026 4 месяца назад +21

      @@stephaniehowell1109you know he could’ve gotten it from war. Theres blood, injuries. Everyone’s blood is mixing and thats the least of their worries in a war setting

    • @BruceLee-fd7uw
      @BruceLee-fd7uw 4 месяца назад

      ​@megrhighly unlikely ocks3026

    • @Prismalpink
      @Prismalpink 3 месяца назад

      So tired of cheating military husbands.

  • @Lela-plants
    @Lela-plants 11 месяцев назад +138

    Back in the 90s everyone admitted to hospitals here in Louisiana had to have a syphilis test. (We we’re in the midst of an epidemic of it)The theory was that we could catch people and treat them while they were admitted and also start the process of contact tracing.
    My mom said when she had me in the late 60s, they wouldn’t admit her without a chest x-ray so I suppose TB was big then. Lol
    Fun fact, you also used to have to have a syphilis test to get a marriage license. Same reason I guess, trying to stop a easily transmitted disease.

    • @MsElizaRae
      @MsElizaRae 8 месяцев назад +21

      They need to bring back that std test before marriage rule lol...maybe even dna run downs 😂

    • @sarahgilbert8036
      @sarahgilbert8036 4 месяца назад +3

      Sadly, there's no test or ruling to limit stupidity from being passed on 😢 (general remark, not aimed at anyone in particular).

    • @donnastormer9652
      @donnastormer9652 2 месяца назад +2

      I lived in New Mexico and when I got married in 1970 I think it was we had to have a blood test for syphilis before we could get a marriage license

    • @rudolphvalentinoconnection8298
      @rudolphvalentinoconnection8298 23 дня назад

      STDS including syphilis is running rampant in Lousiana...a GOP governor interferred with Planned Parenthood which was the only place offering STD services to people who needed it and didn't have any other access. That is the type of shortsighted, religious nonsense that is on the table for the whole country in the future if these people regain control...

  • @makyapierce5486
    @makyapierce5486 4 месяца назад +42

    My ex at the time had this and gave it to me but Fun fact: syphilis makes you lose hair EXTREMELY fast…as well as making your face shut down…trust me I’ve had this…the hospital I went too when I was still in the primary step couldn’t find this in my blood it was months later after it sat in my body for months that a clinic I went too after I almost lost sight in my right eye took my blood and found it and said to act quick…a year later my hair is fully grown back and I’m cured

  • @SnoopReddogg
    @SnoopReddogg Год назад +828

    Funny story: My neighbour worked at a rural nursing home in Australia. I remember her telling me that whenever any elderly gentleman moved in, if they were WW2 veterans, they'd be tested for STDs.
    The irony was some of these men where pillers of the community, from some of the most respected families in the district and genuine proper gentleman. But sure enough, a large percentage of them also tested positive for a dose of clap and pox that they pick up during the war.

    • @jackkraken3888
      @jackkraken3888 Год назад +140

      A hero on the streets a beast in the sheets..

    • @jeffcombs2950
      @jeffcombs2950 Год назад +174

      It's also estimated that Allied soldiers (gentlemen) committed 100,000 rapes in Europe during the war.

    • @calonarang7378
      @calonarang7378 Год назад

      You also have sex workers Australia, so it should be more common, lol

    • @sakabula2357
      @sakabula2357 Год назад +45

      @@jeffcombs2950 mostly Russian??

    • @tileux
      @tileux Год назад +43

      @@jeffcombs2950 just for the record, Australians only fought in europe in their allied country, greece, during ww2, and for most of that time were in retreat in 1940/41. The rest of the time they were in harsh deserts or stinking jungles outside europe. Not exactly conducive to sexual activity of any kind, let alone non consensual sexual activity.

  • @mikep9312
    @mikep9312 Год назад +252

    The Al Capone case was really weird, guy seemed like he was the happiest he'd ever been in his life when it started affecting his brain.

    • @LonelyHearts.Co24
      @LonelyHearts.Co24 Год назад +41

      Yeah no sane person goes fishing in there swimming pool......

    • @krispynachos9980
      @krispynachos9980 Год назад +80

      So insane he forgot to do his taxes.

    • @mattr.1887
      @mattr.1887 Год назад +38

      He had money and women, of course he was happy.

    • @barnacleboi2595
      @barnacleboi2595 Год назад

      Ignorance is bliss, of course. If your brain was damaged and you reverted back to a childlike mentality, you would also be happy all the time since you can barely think rationally.

    • @KanyeTheGayFish69
      @KanyeTheGayFish69 Год назад +1

      @@mattr.1887 syphilis doesn’t make you happy

  • @johntumahab323
    @johntumahab323 8 месяцев назад +11

    The fact that such a highly specific bacterium needs such stringent conditions to survive and thrive yet still infects millions each year should tell you what horn dogs we are as a species.

  • @nirvana5902
    @nirvana5902 3 месяца назад +11

    You've ticked every checkbox I had at the end. I'm a med student, but a lot of the time studying becomes overwhelming. Videos like this reignite the passion in me to try and become a better physician & hopefully acquiring such knowledge in the future!

  • @Ydce1891
    @Ydce1891 Год назад +203

    I had no that it was so horrible. My great grandpa died of complications from syphilis. Apparently after moving here from Norway he had an affair. My great grandmother eventually tested positive for it but by that time we had medication fortunately.
    Cheating is terrible and he definitely paid the price for it but, I never understood how much he suffered
    😢❤

    • @krispynachos9980
      @krispynachos9980 Год назад +5

      Should've worn a franger

    • @LonelyHearts.Co24
      @LonelyHearts.Co24 Год назад +23

      Learnt his lesson in the afterlife...probably.

    • @Ydce1891
      @Ydce1891 Год назад

      @@LonelyHearts.Co24 is that really appropriate? You’re going to learn your lesson as well one day.

    • @dinacharlayne1912
      @dinacharlayne1912 4 месяца назад

      with std's like this we have no patience with cheating men. and promiscurous men.

    • @Prismalpink
      @Prismalpink 3 месяца назад

      Karma exists.

  • @mr.d8214
    @mr.d8214 11 месяцев назад +16

    Back in 1973, I worked at the county fair for a week. A lady had open sore syphilis. An old man traveling with the carnys was having sex with her. The county health department was called and she was taken put in quarantine.
    She looked absolutely nasty. She had open, weeping, sores on her feet.

  • @marcuscicero9587
    @marcuscicero9587 Год назад +109

    another lovely situation I could've easily found myself in during my younger years. I am truly blessed for having avoided so many calamities in my life

    • @LobsterCucumber
      @LobsterCucumber Год назад +1

      Easy when you never get laid lmao

    • @cassanateli
      @cassanateli 2 месяца назад

      Lol I’m so grateful you survived your boring life long enough to self flagellate on youtube

  • @trex3003
    @trex3003 Год назад +131

    A spirochete bacterium like in Lyme disease. In Lyme, the spirochete also protects itself once it enters the bloodstream and the story gets worse. Could you cover the Lyme Borrelia Burgdorferi please? It's like a creature from a horror movie.

    • @teresaalmedina2510
      @teresaalmedina2510 Год назад +11

      That's an excellent suggestion, and I hope they do because I'm very interested. That's actually how I found this video

    • @jenniferlloyd9574
      @jenniferlloyd9574 Год назад +10

      I still have the feeling that Lyme is a Govt "gain of function" spirochete. Around the same time Lyme began to be noticed, veterinarians were observing and enormous increase with tick infestations on animals. Ticks are much more prolific than they were 50 years ago. Now, you might see an animal literally covered and suffering extreme anemia. Google... interesting that the Lyme vector has also gained function.

    • @igostupidfast3
      @igostupidfast3 Год назад +4

      on a similar subject he should also do video on hoq the Lone Star tick can cause allergies to red meat in human too

    • @ktmggg
      @ktmggg 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@jenniferlloyd9574 And the increase of ticks could also be due to climate change. Milder winters and warmer summers cause almost all insect populations to increase. I live in the Pacific Northwest and have seen ant, cockroach and spider colonies increase to levels that had only been seen in the Southern U.S. Not everything is a conspiracy.

    • @joannvonroemer7102
      @joannvonroemer7102 3 месяца назад +3

      ​@@ktmggg But climate change is.

  • @Kittyxoxo
    @Kittyxoxo Год назад +47

    actually im glad i stumbled over this piece, im doing a thing on microbiology and I like that you found actual spiraling cells in motion to see how they transfer and the comparisons you did on the skin, i got to understand it better and know why they are like that, i appreciate this video, very helpful indeed!

  • @tylerrjohnson68
    @tylerrjohnson68 Год назад +335

    A close friend suffers from brain atrophy from having syphilis
    It reduced him to an eight yr olds mentality.

    • @hellohej5525
      @hellohej5525 Год назад +48

      That's tragic

    • @Parasiteve
      @Parasiteve Год назад +31

      is he at all aware of what happened to him now that he's like that? like does he know his brain is that of an 8 year old now?

    • @tylerrjohnson68
      @tylerrjohnson68 Год назад +95

      @@Parasiteve yes, he is well aware of what happened to him. He has bouts of depression because he knows he's diminished

    • @omgheather1
      @omgheather1 Год назад +28

      That's awful, I'm so sorry. I hope he's living life as best as he can, even though it must be very difficult.

    • @Wa3ypx
      @Wa3ypx Год назад

      That would be akin to Alzheimer's

  • @the_burning_barrel
    @the_burning_barrel Год назад +4

    I stumbled across this video by chance and my lord was i hooked subed instantly and i'm now binge watching your content.

  • @jeffmunroe8210
    @jeffmunroe8210 Год назад +123

    I had syphillis for about 6 months. Only for so long because of a misdiagnosis by the doctor I saw. I was rotting away and it hurt so bad just to go number two. I had bloody stool and I couldn’t sit right on the couch or chairs. I was in excruciating pain and my mouth was soooo dry. I had cuts on the insides of my cheek, a sore on my lips, and my nose was constantly bloody.

    • @calvinm1866
      @calvinm1866 Год назад +3

      How did you get it?

    • @jeffmunroe8210
      @jeffmunroe8210 Год назад +1

      @@calvinm1866 I had unprotected sex with a woman I didn’t know had it.

    • @jeffmunroe8210
      @jeffmunroe8210 Год назад +19

      @@calvinm1866 I don’t think she knew at the time.

    • @jeffmunroe8210
      @jeffmunroe8210 Год назад +2

      @Erathostenes Idk. I had it for like6 months and it just gradually got worse.

    • @proudcynophile1901
      @proudcynophile1901 Год назад +9

      ​@Erathostenes secondary, when the rashes and painful lesions appear. That's why if you discover a shankre, a painless odd looking zit on your mouth or genital area, don't delay go to the doctor immediately!

  • @Uajd-hb1qs
    @Uajd-hb1qs Год назад +98

    I wonder if modern zombies was inspired by some syphilis victims. Someone stumbling around, possibly lashing out occasionally, growling or barely speaking from increasing brain damage and resembling a rotting corpse from the severe scarring caused by vascular damage.

    • @cypherusuh
      @cypherusuh Год назад +10

      Nah, rabies is more likely

    • @hangfire5944
      @hangfire5944 Год назад +15

      @@cypherusuh why not both?

    • @Uajd-hb1qs
      @Uajd-hb1qs Год назад +1

      And so the zombie virus was born

    • @SgtTeddybear66
      @SgtTeddybear66 Год назад +5

      I think the bible contributes to the idea of zombies as well. In the bible, it explains that during the tribulation of the world, where Gods wrath is poured out, people will seek death, but will be unable to die. They will be forced to live.

    • @Uajd-hb1qs
      @Uajd-hb1qs Год назад +1

      @@SgtTeddybear66 I’ve heard of that. I’ve also heard the second coming of Jesus will make the dead rise from their graves but I’m not sure if that was in any Christian scriptures.

  • @benjaminwilson4558
    @benjaminwilson4558 11 месяцев назад +15

    Very informative about a curious topic so many of us have unknowingly been associated with. My grandfather died in 1934 at age 36. Doing research his Death Certificate read :Cause Of Death: Spinal Lues.(?) ( Syphilis) He contracted it in WW 1 and died in Tertiary Stage 14 years later. Relatives-unknowingly stated he died of severe dementia.

  • @LimpBizkit999
    @LimpBizkit999 11 месяцев назад +3

    I just happened to stumble upon your channel. I am now hooked 🙂

  • @PoeLemic
    @PoeLemic Год назад +85

    Thanks for showing me about this disease syphilis. I was wondering because my father has it, and they said they couldn't cure it for because they didn't catch it early enough.

    • @karyannfontaine8757
      @karyannfontaine8757 Год назад +22

      How sad for you and your father. I will bet there are many people diagnosed with dementia who are affected by the third stage of Syphilis. Senior people are so overlooked.

    • @SQUAREHEADSAM1912
      @SQUAREHEADSAM1912 Год назад +18

      Unfortunately stage three syphilis causes severe rapid onset dementia. Usually resulting in death within 4-6 after dementia is first active.

    • @cursedcancersurvivor
      @cursedcancersurvivor Год назад

      Did he bang a Vietnamese hooker?

    • @susanmorgan4151
      @susanmorgan4151 Год назад +3

      I'm sorry to hear this. I pray that you will have help with your father.

    • @ITACHIshinden89
      @ITACHIshinden89 5 месяцев назад +1

      Not trying to be offensive by asking this question on you? But are you also tested positive for syphilis? Because in my knowledge a parent can also spread syphilis to their son/daughter if they get syphilis

  • @fbllflameengineer3511
    @fbllflameengineer3511 Год назад +171

    Yooo these episodes getting more dark I love it

  • @kaeosfactory
    @kaeosfactory 9 месяцев назад +17

    This was extremely well presented and detailed. Please do a video for every single STD on the list.

  • @MaNkYmInX
    @MaNkYmInX 3 месяца назад +2

    Absolutely fascinating. Just had to subscribe. Looking forward to more!👍

  • @FloppyDucks
    @FloppyDucks Год назад +144

    Great video as always just surprised and wished you talked about the horrors of the tuskegee syphilis trials

    • @patriciaroysdon9540
      @patriciaroysdon9540 Год назад +15

      Agreed.

    • @elizabethmurphy4880
      @elizabethmurphy4880 Год назад +2

      😢

    • @TheDaruiKumo
      @TheDaruiKumo 11 месяцев назад +2

      i agree, especial since I'm pretty sure some of the footage was from the trials.

    • @jacquelineconerly9150
      @jacquelineconerly9150 9 месяцев назад +3

      Yes, they should have mentioned Tuskegee. Those men were injected with syphilis, left untreated, and their wives were infected and left untreated, all in the name of eugenics. A lot of people suffered and died horrible deaths. Penicillin was around but was not used.

    • @JC-kk5wg
      @JC-kk5wg 3 месяца назад

      Outside of the context of discussion.

  • @sciencenerd7639
    @sciencenerd7639 Год назад +30

    Definitely horrifying! Love your channel, keep up the good work!

  • @man_ish1234
    @man_ish1234 7 месяцев назад +3

    As a doctor, i highly appreciate this beautifully made detailed video yet with crisp information !

  • @thangfahsavung9120
    @thangfahsavung9120 Месяц назад

    Your pathophysiology is so understandable. I love it.

  • @Michelle-ft6yt
    @Michelle-ft6yt Год назад +39

    Had a neighbor who died with Syphilis tell-tell signs. I eventually worked at nursing facility she was placed in. Ms. Luella RIP

    • @KS-yp1jl
      @KS-yp1jl Год назад +4

      *telltale

    • @midloran
      @midloran Год назад

      I'm sorry to hear that. Rest in peace, Ms. Luella

    • @iklektikEye
      @iklektikEye 10 месяцев назад

      Why are you giving out her information? That's a HIPPA violation. RIP to her.

  • @JR-gh8lp
    @JR-gh8lp Год назад +18

    Excellent video! Short but rich with interesting facts, read in a steady clear manner

    • @chateaupig826
      @chateaupig826 Год назад

      Yeah , the fact it lies dormant like that . Microbes are so intelligent . It's a battlefield .
      Look how it changes a protein to evade detection by our antibodies .

  • @sherrycontreras8848
    @sherrycontreras8848 Год назад +4

    I'm a retired nerves and you never forget what you learned and the more that medical has raised and it's very interesting that I keep in touch learning different things thank you for sure your video and sharing my name is Sherry Contreras Dallas TX be real or stand still God bless you please keep sending more videos thanks 🙏💓💓👍👍🙏💓

  • @rajr1032
    @rajr1032 3 месяца назад +1

    Great video, animation, graphics, and information.

  • @marichristian1072
    @marichristian1072 Год назад +21

    Thank you. This is a disease that has highly specific periods of dormancy and eruption. If the infected patient is lucky, he or she will die of heart disease before the tertiary phase.

  • @annnichols3091
    @annnichols3091 Год назад +39

    When I was a medical librarian, I learned this limerick about syphilis: There once was a man from Bombay, who thought that the "syph" went away, so now he has tabes and saber-shinned babies, and thinks that he's queen of the May.

  • @ReaIHuman
    @ReaIHuman 8 месяцев назад +2

    I'll never get sick of videos like this.

  • @nathanbond8165
    @nathanbond8165 9 месяцев назад +5

    So what's interesting about Al Capone is that when Al Capone had syphilis they had a cure penicillin had been invented but he was offered multiple times penicillin to care his syphilis but he was irrationally insanely scared of needles and refused treatment so he could have been cured but he refused any sort of treatment

    • @Sarah-dq1fm
      @Sarah-dq1fm 7 месяцев назад +1

      This is not true. He was treated but by that time his condition was so advanced that it didn’t make a difference.

    • @nathanbond8165
      @nathanbond8165 7 месяцев назад

      @@Sarah-dq1fm interesting okay well complain to the History Channel for disseminating false information because I learned that fact from a documentary on the History Channel about Al Capone!

    • @Sarah-dq1fm
      @Sarah-dq1fm 7 месяцев назад

      Check your sources 🙂

  • @uneedpuns1713
    @uneedpuns1713 Год назад +23

    anatomy of neck snapping? the one where a human turns a person head backwards or partially and why it does kill them as people can be paralysed neck down

    • @DaveTexas
      @DaveTexas Год назад +14

      That one’s super easy to understand. When the spinal cord is severed near the brain stem, autonomic functions like respiration stop functioning. When you cannot inhale, you die quite quickly - although not instantaneously like you see in movies.
      Severing of the spinal cord lower down causes paralysis; the location of the break in the spinal cord determines how much paralysis the person suffers. The higher up the break, the greater the paralysis.

  • @smalachit1571
    @smalachit1571 Год назад +8

    Informative and to the point. Very enjoyable.

  • @RickoH_NZ
    @RickoH_NZ Год назад +10

    The aorta is the main artery that carries blood AWAY from your heart to the rest of your body (not into the heart as stated in this video). The blood leaves the heart through the aortic valve. Then it travels through the aorta, making a cane-shaped curve that allows other major arteries to deliver oxygen-rich blood to the brain, muscles and other cells

  • @onefatpiggy
    @onefatpiggy 9 месяцев назад +6

    Never had syphyilis but I'm glad its curable nowadays coz the effects are scary

  • @JonSmith-cx7gr
    @JonSmith-cx7gr Год назад +92

    The neurologist Dr Oliver Sacks (Portrayed in the film Awakenings by Robin Williams) recalled in his book, 'The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales', the case of a woman aged 85 who had suddenly become more lively and funny and young feeling. It was discovered that she had contracted syphilis some 65 years before and the 3rd stage had just begun. I have copied it below if anybody is interested:
    Cupid’s Disease
    A bright woman of ninety, Natasha K., recently came to our clinic. Soon after her eighty-eighth
    birthday, she said, she noticed ‘a change’. What sort of change? we queried.
    ‘Delightful!’ she exclaimed. ‘I thoroughly enjoyed it. I felt more energetic, more alive-I felt young
    once again. I took an interest in the young men. I started to feel, you might say, “frisky”-yes, frisky.’
    ‘This was a problem?’
    ‘No, not at first. I felt well, extremely well-why should I think anything was the matter?’
    ‘And then?’
    ‘My friends started to worry. First they said, “You look radiant- a new lease on life!”, but then they
    started to think it was not quite-appropriate. “You were always so shy,” they said, “and now you’re a
    flirt. You giggle, you tell jokes-at your age, is that right?” ‘
    ‘And how did you feel?’
    ‘I was taken aback. I’d been carried along, and it didn’t occur to me to question what was happening.
    But then I did. I said to myself, “You’re 89, Natasha, this has been going on for a year. You were always
    so temperate in feeling-and now this extravagance! You are an old woman, nearing the end. What
    could justify such a sudden euphoria?” And as soon as I thought of euphoria, things took on a new
    complexion ... “You’re sick, my dear,” I said to myself. “You’re feeling too well, you have to be ill!” ‘
    ‘Ill? Emotionally? Mentally ill?’
    ‘No, not emotionally-physically ill. It was something in my body, my brain, that was making me
    high. And then I thought- goddam it, it’s Cupid’s Disease!’
    ‘Cupid’s Disease?’ I echoed, blankly. I had never heard of the term before.
    ‘Yes, Cupid’s Disease-syphilis, you know. I was in a brothel in Salonika, nearly seventy years ago.
    I caught syphilis-lots of the girls had it-we called it Cupid’s Disease. My husband saved me, took me
    out, had it treated. That was years before penicillin, of course. Could it have caught up with me after all
    these years?’
    There may be an immense latent period between the primary infection and the advent of
    neurosyphilis, especially if the primary infection has been suppressed, not eradicated. I had one patient,
    treated with Salvarsan by Ehrlich himself, who developed tabes dorsalis-one form of neurosyphilis-
    more than fifty years later.
    But I had never heard of an interval of seventy years-nor of a self-diagnosis of cerebral syphilis
    mooted so calmly and clearly.
    ‘That’s an amazing suggestion,’ I replied after some thought. ‘It would never have occurred to me-
    but perhaps you are right.’
    She was right; the spinal fluid was positive, she did have neurosyphilis, it was indeed the spirochetes
    stimulating her ancient cerebral cortex. Now the question of treatment arose. But here another dilemma
    presented itself, propounded, with typical acuity, by Mrs K. herself. ‘I don’t know that I want it treated,’
    she said. ‘I know it’s an illness, but it’s made me feel well. I’ve enjoyed it, I still enjoy it, I won’t deny
    it. It’s made me feel livelier, friskier, than I have in twenty years. It’s been fun. But I know when a good
    thing goes too far, and stops being good. I’ve had thoughts, I’ve had impulses, I won’t tell you, which
    are-well, embarrassing and silly. It was like being a little tiddly, a little tipsy, at first, but if it goes any
    further . . .’ She mimed a drooling, spastic dement. ‘I guessed I had Cupid’s, that’s why I came to you. I
    don’t want it to get worse, that would be awful; but I don’t want it cured-that would be just as bad. I
    wasn’t fully alive until the wrigglies got me. Do you think you could keep it just as it is?’
    We thought for a while, and our course, mercifully, was clear. We have given her penicillin, which
    has killed the spirochetes, but can do nothing to reverse the cerebral changes, the disinhibitions, they
    have caused.
    And now Mrs K. has it both ways, enjoying a mild disinhibition, a release of thought and impulse,
    without any threat to her self-control or of further damage to her cortex. She hopes to live, thus
    reanimated, rejuvenated, to a hundred. ‘Funny thing,’ she says. ‘You’ve got to give it to Cupid.’

    • @BethBurns68
      @BethBurns68 11 месяцев назад +7

      That was very interesting and I'm glad she could continue her rejuvenation for a while longer. :)

    • @808bigisland
      @808bigisland 11 месяцев назад +2

      Nice story!

    • @Sgt-xw5lx
      @Sgt-xw5lx 11 месяцев назад +2

      Amazing story

    • @prapanthebachelorette6803
      @prapanthebachelorette6803 10 месяцев назад +2

      Glad she got treated and gain it both ways

    • @user-vf6yn5ec3u
      @user-vf6yn5ec3u 8 месяцев назад +1

      Insane isn't it?? How we react to just everything around us. Or bodies are so f-n awesome.

  • @marekceri8310
    @marekceri8310 Год назад +5

    Awesome video!! Happy to learn something new from your video. Keep it going!

  • @marcolozano4169
    @marcolozano4169 Год назад +127

    Hopefully Syphilis will go away for ever! Very educational. Thank you Dark Science.

    • @Edward1312
      @Edward1312 Год назад +19

      These diseases never go away like cholera they are opportunist and await their next opportunity to infect as they persist in the natural environment. Only smallpox has been eradicated and even that disease still exists in medical laboratories.

    • @z414141
      @z414141 Год назад

      Go away?? It lives in humans so unless the population isn't wiped out then Syphilis won't be either.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Год назад

      Sadly, with the rise of anti-vax quacks we can expect to see a resurgence of things like Syphilis.

    • @soulsurfer7702
      @soulsurfer7702 7 месяцев назад +1

      It’s rare but syphilis can become resistant to penicillin due to people not finishing treatment. So even if one version of syphillis can go away forever another can pop up that is resistant.

    • @NotMykl
      @NotMykl 5 месяцев назад

      People are throwing fits over vaccinating for COVID and their kids for childhood diseases and there you are expecting them to go along with accepting meds to kill syphilis. There are to many dumbasses on the Earth to ever eradicate any disease.

  • @thatrogersmith
    @thatrogersmith 11 месяцев назад

    Absolutely fascinating. Subbed

  • @swlgns4663
    @swlgns4663 3 месяца назад

    You had me at "Dark Science " new subber

  • @hazymorning1823
    @hazymorning1823 Год назад +24

    I love the amount of detail, enough to understand why and what is going on. I'm learning much!

  • @polishdoggo6371
    @polishdoggo6371 Год назад +14

    This video is the best promotion of being responsible with what you do with other people i have ever seen

    • @chateaupig826
      @chateaupig826 Год назад +1

      Yep , I'll be demanding my intended partner takes a test to prove they don't have syphilis

    • @BigBadJerryRogers
      @BigBadJerryRogers Год назад +1

      This blood test should really be more widely available for everyone and free of course. It's just a simple finger stick blood test. They should be offering it at every CVS or rite aid.

    • @mikejohn0088
      @mikejohn0088 Год назад

      Stay home helps.

  • @gabe_2544
    @gabe_2544 3 месяца назад

    Excellent video. Understandable explanations for lay people. The visuals were very helpful.

  • @TheHeartlessAlchemist
    @TheHeartlessAlchemist 11 месяцев назад

    Very interesting topic and very well explained. Very easy to understand. Great video.

  • @miketrissel5494
    @miketrissel5494 Год назад +35

    Speaking of having questions answered ... how would the first case of Syphilis have come about? It can only grow in humans, it is transferred from human to human. This is a question I have been asking for 60 years, after my grandfather in his 70's, contracted it from a blood transfusion at a VA hospital in Cleveland.

    • @2degucitas
      @2degucitas Год назад +8

      Really! The origin is a puzzle. It had to come from somewhere!

    • @Madamchief
      @Madamchief Год назад +1

      Probably zoonotic mixing of blood like lots of other parasites

    • @mustang8206
      @mustang8206 Год назад

      If you believe in evolution another bacteria in our bodies must have mutated. If you believe in the Bible then it must have appeared after the Fall in a human

    • @roswaldwalton1147
      @roswaldwalton1147 Год назад +13

      I can't say I'm aware of the origin of the virus but the body of a young male was discovered in Pompei, he had obvious signs of the virus but also had obviously been very well taken care of by his family. So, it's been around a lot longer than people believe.

    • @pandamakeuppics7772
      @pandamakeuppics7772 Год назад +2

      Aliens

  • @yoodduda4689
    @yoodduda4689 Год назад +5

    Good video! Thanks for your effort

  • @chickstar69duplicity35
    @chickstar69duplicity35 Год назад +1

    Excellent presentation. Thank you :)

  • @davidwareing9663
    @davidwareing9663 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for this really great summary of a horrific infection. History can teach us a lot. Luckily for now at least we still have some good antibiotics to treat some of these devastating infections.

  • @Strype13
    @Strype13 Год назад +294

    Fun fact: In the days before Penicillin, people of the more wealthy class (such as our founding fathers) used to wear those silly-looking powdered wigs in order to cover up the hair loss, as well as the funky smells that were attributed to Syphilis symptoms. That should give you something awkwardly neat to think about every time you happen to glance down at your [American] money from now on.

    • @stevepalpatine2828
      @stevepalpatine2828 Год назад +19

      Fun fact #2 - Al Capone died of syphilis in Alcatraz. He didn't have it when he got there, meaning Al Capone got buggered in Alcatraz

    • @optimusdimegatron1297
      @optimusdimegatron1297 Год назад +62

      @@stevepalpatine2828 he had it before and died out of the prison.

    • @MrIgottap
      @MrIgottap Год назад +48

      @@stevepalpatine2828did you happen to miss the part about a 15-20 year dormancy period before the final stage kicks off?

    • @angelofthedead1886
      @angelofthedead1886 Год назад +8

      The same thing with some European aristocrats as well.

    • @michaelmichaelagnew8503
      @michaelmichaelagnew8503 Год назад

      @@stevepalpatine2828 He had it long before he got there. Since it takes decades to kill you.

  • @adamvagenknecht
    @adamvagenknecht Год назад +10

    Yes! Love your videos. Make more please 😅

  • @joelryan3615
    @joelryan3615 Год назад +1

    I loved this video..very interesting..im subscribed ..gonna check them all out...thanks for the information

  • @chriswilkinson2548
    @chriswilkinson2548 8 месяцев назад

    This is bloody good information. To say this. Great. I have never understand this information before until now

  • @tigerone2353
    @tigerone2353 Год назад +3

    That was a nice demonstration and explanation of what syphilis can do.

  • @abd-animation-22
    @abd-animation-22 Год назад +141

    I wonder what the people thought of the scientist who said that the infection can come back 15 years later
    Like how did he discover that and link it to syphilis

    • @nikitakazakevic1928
      @nikitakazakevic1928 Год назад +35

      Well, there were some very unethical experiments.

    • @mekkler
      @mekkler Год назад

      @@nikitakazakevic1928 i.e. the United States government intentionally infected mainly African American males with it. Go ahead and say it, lest we forget.

    • @tomlxyz
      @tomlxyz Год назад

      I think it was known way before scientists got involved, specifically in regards to it being linked to prostitution

    • @michaelmichaelagnew8503
      @michaelmichaelagnew8503 Год назад +5

      He took one for science lol.

    • @michaellavery4899
      @michaellavery4899 Год назад +1

      If you were a pupil in my science class, I would say that was a good point and a great question.
      However, if you were a pupil in my English class, I would reprimand you for your failure to use punctuation correctly.
      If I was a real teacher, I probably wouldn't be wasting my time, and yours, making crass comments on RUclips, so forget about it.

  • @idellbrown1825
    @idellbrown1825 11 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent information!

  • @slotvalleyracing
    @slotvalleyracing 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great show!

  • @babycarrotz32
    @babycarrotz32 Год назад +12

    Heeey! I love your videos. I'd like to recommend a video, how the black death end or three examples of modern biological warfare/examples of medieval biological warfare.

  • @coppycatt
    @coppycatt Год назад +7

    I liked the old content, i like the new content. Great job right here. Keep going ❤️

  • @queezlemacnamara9801
    @queezlemacnamara9801 3 месяца назад +1

    Outstanding presentation. Good job.
    🇭🇲

  • @judyferguson3185
    @judyferguson3185 Год назад +220

    When I got married in 1972, the couple was required to have blood taken to test for syphilis and gonorrhea. I guess that was one way to try to curb these diseases. But that was back then when you were required to be married to have sex🤣🤣🤣 so they held you hostage until you had submitted a sample and when it was ok, then you got your marriage license😄❤️🎉

    • @madwhitehare3635
      @madwhitehare3635 Год назад

      Judy Ferguson……why the laughs? Staying faithful to one person seems to be a pretty good rule considering the subject of this video…..
      Certainly better than giving your body away to any Tom, Dick or Harriet.

    • @karyannfontaine8757
      @karyannfontaine8757 Год назад +16

      Yes, I recall that as well. Do they still require the testing?

    • @pettytoni1955
      @pettytoni1955 Год назад +12

      The tests were for STDs such as syphilis, and rubella (German Measles, which causes severe birth defects). Blacks and Latinos were also tested (and still are in New York) for Sickle cell anemia.

    • @judyferguson3185
      @judyferguson3185 Год назад +19

      Toni P when I got married in 1971 there were no vaccines for any kind of measles. Yes they were dangerous but the treatment was to keep kids home, in a dark room and ride it out. I am so happy that there are vaccines for most childhood illnesses.

    • @pettytoni1955
      @pettytoni1955 Год назад +10

      Judy Ferguson: While they've been using the combined Measles, Mumps & Rubella (MMR) vaccine for a number of years now, growing up in the 60's, my mom ensured we got the only vaccines available back then: separate measles and mumps vaccines, as well as the ones for small pox and polio. Yes, thank goodness for vaccines!

  • @mrsfahrenheit
    @mrsfahrenheit Год назад +21

    fun fact : Captain Jack Sparrow apparently is supposed to have Syphillis. Being the cause for his weird behaviour and mental state. Indicator for that is the what seems to be a rash he has on the side of his face so Jack will likely have died from Syphillis

  • @rncine
    @rncine Год назад +9

    Lyme Disease symptoms are so eerily similar except they don’t get genital sores. Stages are very similar,too even to the bacteria entering
    the brain. Antibiotics also the cure.

  • @zbs8334
    @zbs8334 Год назад +6

    Learned about this during my medical micro course. BACTERIA ARE TERRIFYING!

  • @docjoe86
    @docjoe86 Год назад +217

    Syphillis appears to have originated in the Americas and was likely brought to Europe during the Columbian exchange. The first confirmed outbreak was in 1495 in Naples Italy. There is some evidence of a similar disease in Europe before the columbian exchange, but it may have been a different disease with similar symptoms.

    • @seanriopel3132
      @seanriopel3132 Год назад +50

      Currently that is just an alternative hypothesis. It more likely existed in Europe long before that but it was not known about as the symptoms could have been attributed to more widely known diseases. That is why it is called The Great Imitator. Leprosy, for example, can cause horrible disfigurement just as syphilis does.

    • @TheCrain
      @TheCrain Год назад +12

      I agree with this one. The other hypotheses need all sorts of on the money timing for them to be true. I mean, only AFTER they come back is when the outbreak starts?

    • @seanriopel3132
      @seanriopel3132 Год назад +3

      @@TheCrain what do you mean by "on the money timing" with reference to the other hypotheses?

    • @TheCrain
      @TheCrain Год назад +3

      @@seanriopel3132 The Carbon dating on some skeletons where dated to right before the outbreak. That seems oddly specific.

    • @seanriopel3132
      @seanriopel3132 Год назад

      @@TheCrain They have similar evidence from a 9,000 year old skull in China.

  • @darthshaggy9697
    @darthshaggy9697 Год назад +97

    Could u cover the dark science behind rabies or ebola?

  • @ColRAPR
    @ColRAPR 8 месяцев назад +1

    Outstanding report !

  • @paigeturner7788
    @paigeturner7788 Год назад +1

    Very informative video. Also, great narrator. 👍🏻

  • @MrAndyLocksmith
    @MrAndyLocksmith Год назад +3

    Interesting and well presented. New subscriber.

  • @dismussy
    @dismussy Год назад +3

    great video as always

  • @eveleung8855
    @eveleung8855 Год назад +1

    Thank you for the lesson .

  • @edgardner8539
    @edgardner8539 11 месяцев назад +1

    Interesting and very captivating. Thanks

  • @johnpayne7873
    @johnpayne7873 Год назад +11

    Correction: oxygenated (from the lung) blood exits the heart through the aortic valve and into the aorta.
    Blood enters the left - or “systemic” ventricle (pumping chamber) - through the mitral valve.

  • @gyvercraft101
    @gyvercraft101 Год назад +5

    Very informative video!

  • @astroboy90210
    @astroboy90210 6 месяцев назад +2

    I was diagnosed positive to Sy years back and I was totally devastated. I had chancre so I had an injection in my butt then took antibiotic for almost a month.
    That is a shameful disease and I hated myself because of it.
    I regularly take Sy test (VDRL) and it is in my blood permanently according to the doctor.
    I am worried coz I feel like I am starting to feel some later stage of it.

  • @zenwolf1046
    @zenwolf1046 Год назад +6

    Right now in Alaska there is a quiet syphilis epidemic

  • @dragospahontu
    @dragospahontu Год назад +21

    The single best RUclips channel in the world.